|
|
| |
|
|
| |
Men Don't Talk Less Than Women
Men and women say about the same amount of words
daily, study shows.
By Miranda Hitti WebMD Medical News
There's new buzz about how much
women and men talk -- and if you're picturing
Chatty Cathy and Silent Steve, think again.
Both sexes say the same amount of words -- about
16,000 per day -- a new study shows.
The study, published in today's issue of the
journal Science, included nearly 400
undergraduate students -- 210 women and 186 men.
Each student wore a device called an
electronically activated recorder (EAR) during
their waking hours.
The device quietly recorded the students' words
for 30 seconds at a time, every 12 minutes or
so. But the students didn't know when the
recorder was on. They were told it recorded at
random times.
The researchers included Matthias Mehl, PhD,
assistant professor at the University of
Arizona's psychology department. They padded the
recorder so students couldn't sense when it was
on.
They transcribed the students' tapes and then
estimated how many words the students said
daily, based on 17 waking hours per day.
Men Talk, Women Talk
"The data suggest that women spoke on average
16,215 words and men 15,669 words" per day, the
researchers write.
But that difference of 546 words isn't exactly
carved in stone. In fact, it's so small that the
researchers say it could have been due to
chance.
"Thus, the data fail to reveal a reliable sex
difference in daily word use," write the
researchers, who call the chat count a "lexical
budget."
Some students were chattier than others.
For instance, one of the most talkative men
uttered 47,000 words per day, while the quietest
guy barely spoke 500 words, Mehl notes in a
University of Arizona news release.
Most of the students were studying psychology at
the University of Texas at Austin. That's where
Mehl worked on the study as a graduate student.
The study also included about 100 students from
the Autonomous University of Nuevo Leon in
Monterrey, Mexico.
The sound clips were gathered in six groups of
students from 1998 to 2004. Women didn't
substantially outtalk men in any of those
groups.
The researchers conclude that even though they
only studied college students, "the widespread
and highly publicized stereotype about female
talkativeness is unfounded."
|
| |
|
© WebMD. All rights reserved. |
|
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
| |
| |
|
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
The researchers conclude that
even though they only studied college students,
"the widespread and highly publicized stereotype
about female talkativeness is unfounded."
|
|
|
|
| |
|
|